Orchids and Hummingbird Puzzle Details:

About: Today's jigsaw is based on Martin Johnson Heade's painting Orchids and Hummingbird. Martin Johnson Heade (August 11, 1819 – September 4, 1904) was a prolific American painter known for his salt marsh landscapes, seascapes, and depictions of tropical birds (such as hummingbirds), as well as lotus blossoms and other still life. Image Credits: Martin Johnson Heade

Some Other Puzzles In Our Gallery

A fun and challenging jigsaw based on Frederick Arthur Bridgman's River Landscape With Deer painting. Frederick Arthur Bridgman (November 10, 1847 - January 13, 1928) was an American artist known for his paintings of "Orientalist" subjects.

This new puzzle is based on an oil on panel painting by James Ward (1769– 17 November 1859) - a painter, particularly of animals, and an engraver. James Ward was one of the outstanding artists of the day, his singular style and great skill set him above most of his contemporaries, markedly influencing the growth of British art. He was regarded as one of the great animal painters of his time. From 1810 or so, Ward started to paint horses within landscapes; slightly later, he turned to very large-scale landscapes.

Today's puzzle features the painting "Return from the Big Game Hunt" by Manuel Benedito. This is one of Benedito’s most famous compositions. It was painted in the Sierra Morena in 1913 and it represents the painter’s return to a Spanish setting after his European tour (1905-1911).

Today's puzzle is based on the painting with the same name by the Dutch artist Clara Peeters. If you didn't know, Clara Peeters specialised in still lifes with beautiful objects, delicious fruits and expensive food. This type of still life is called "banketje" (banquet) in Dutch. In this painting, in addition to the objects named in the title, there are also curls of butter, figs, a bread roll, a gold-plated Venetian glass, Chinese Wanli porcelain, a silver knife and more. If you look close you can see that Peeters has painted her signature in the handle of the silver knife.

This new jigsaw puzzle is based on Michael Ancher's painting "The Lifeboat is Taken through the Dunes"(Redningsbåden køres gennem klitterne ). In this painting Michael Ancher describes the heroic life the fishermen of Skagen lived. Michael Peter Ancher (9 June 1849 – 19 September 1927) was a Danish impressionist artist. He is most associated with his paintings of fishermen and other scenes from the Danish port of Skagen.

Today's puzzle is based on a painting by Wallis depicting Gerard Johnson carving Shakespeare's funerary monument. Ben Jonson shows Shakespeare's death mask to the sculptor. Gerard Johnson (flourished c. 1612–1623) is the Anglicised form of Gheerart Janssen, a sculptor who worked in Jacobean England and who is thought to have created Shakespeare's funerary monument. In 1849 a death mask was discovered in Germany, and was claimed to be Shakespeare's. It received great publicity when the anatomist Richard Owen authenticated it and suggested that it was used by Johnson as the model for the memorial. Henry Wallis later painted this imagined scene validating the mask. The mask is no longer considered to be authentic.

A Bar at the Folies-Bergère (French: Un bar aux Folies Bergère), painted and exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1882, was the last major work by French painter Édouard Manet. It depicts a scene in the Folies Bergère nightclub in Paris. It originally belonged to the composer Emmanuel Chabrier, who was Manet's neighbor, and hung over his piano.

Today's new jigsaw puzzle is based on a portrait of the great 18th-century actor David Garrick in one of his most famous roles: Shakespeare’s Richard III. It was painted in 1745 by William Hogarth - one of England’s most important portrait painters David Garrick (1717-1779) was the greatest English actor of the 18th century and dominated the London stage for over four decades. His earliest major success was in November 1741 when he played Shakespeare’s Richard III at Goodman’s Fields playhouse.

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